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hey what's up everyone my name is Nicolas and on this video we're gonna goaffiliate marketing, affiliate marketing for beginners, affiliate marketing for beginners 2017, affiliate marketing 2017, affiliate marketing tips, affiliate marketing without a website, affiliate marketing for dummies

over how to do affiliate marketing for beginners so if that is you you're

certainly at the right place now before we do get started I just wanna let you

know that I have a more in-depth training over at mentor with Nick comm

that really goes into all the details about affiliate marketing in addition to

this video so if you would like to check that out head on over to mentor with

nick.com there's a link down in the video description but without further

ado let's get into all this information about affiliate marketing for beginners

affiliate marketing, affiliate marketing for beginners, affiliate marketing for beginners 2017, affiliate marketing 2017, affiliate marketing tips, affiliate marketing without a website, affiliate marketing for dummies

now I did make a previous video on this channel so if you would like to go check

that out it goes into a little bit more depth as well but I had a question

recently from one of my students asking about how to build out a formal and

that's exactly what I want to share with you on this video so if you're looking

for some information about that again this is gonna be a good place now here

is kind of an overview on how to set up a good affiliate marketing campaign or

offer or business however you really want to word it so let me briefly go

over this and then we're gonna kind of touch on some points and then I'll show

you actually how to build when he's out it's very very simple okay so first we

obviously need an audience okay that's just people we need people to sell to

affiliate marketing, affiliate marketing for beginners, affiliate marketing for beginners 2017, affiliate marketing 2017, affiliate marketing tips, affiliate marketing without a website, affiliate marketing for dummies

right you can't really affiliate marketing is all about sales it's

selling other people's products for a percentage of the commission so if you

want to sell stuff you need people all right so the best place to find people

is social media and you can place ads in front of these people there's a lot of

different ways you can do free weight you can do paid ways both ways the next

thing you want to do is send them to what's called a squeeze page in you

place it you can use places like leadpages net to build these out again

I'm gonna show you how to do that here in a second but it's very very simple

okay and then from there you can send them to an offer which I recommend

starting out with Clickbank comm it's a really good place to do it I'll show you

how to navigate on that and then the reason that you want to do this is

affiliate marketing, affiliate marketing for beginners, affiliate marketing for beginners 2017, affiliate marketing 2017, affiliate marketing tips, affiliate marketing without a website, affiliate marketing for dummies

twofold okay the first reason is because you want them to put their you know

email address and name and email address in either one because it's just a small

barrier and if they're likely to take a you know an action on a small barrier

they're more likely to take a bigger action ie the sale

okay so in what's actually happening here is if they're putting their email

address in they're much more likely to make the purchase okay instead of

sending them directly to the offer okay at the same set at the same time we want

to do that because we're building what's called an email list and you can build

this type of stuff over at places like Aweber or comm okay

so then therefore you can start exposing them to the offer multiple times and

that's good because most people don't purchase on the very first exposure okay

and that's why a lot of people struggle with affiliate marketing is because

they're just sending people straight to an offer and then they have no way to

follow up with them when in human nature it takes us about five to seven

exposures to actually make a purchase just think about from your perspective

like do you make a purchase on the first time you see something every single time

no okay not neither does everyone else so we need a way to follow up with them

okay and then therefore once they purchase you make a commission okay so

let me explain a few more things and then I'll show you how to build this

stuff out so I like to really help you understand the stuff and really this

this can help you get a good grasp on this and really have some good

expectations is by utilizing 100 click tests okay so basically what that means

is if you expect to get some sales you've got to send at least a hundred

clicks to this offer okay and what that I'll do it'll show you the percentage

that people are purchasing this at okay and typically you know industry standard

typically is around two percent meaning if you send 100 clicks to that you're

going to get two affiliate sales affiliate commissions okay but see

here's the here's a problem is that a lot of people say oh I sent a bunch of I

sent a bunch people let's offer but they don't really know and it might just be

like twenty people it might be forty people but if you do a hundred people

that usually levels out the averages and eventually around two people are going

to purchase because I mean you could send 90 people to the offer and no one

purchases and then the next two people buy okay so you just got to let the

averages play out okay and you know you can set it up like this we talked about

the ads on the on the social networks to a squeeze page to the offer but once you

start building up that email list you can also just send them directly to an

offer and again do the hundred click test every time you do it okay

now here's one other thing I want to share with you to help you generate some

more sales and then well again I'll show you more about how to

funnel okay so you know essentially your email list is just a place where you can

place ads okay for free so how do we get more sales so here's the process again

you know it plays the ad in front of people we send them to the squeeze page

they put their name and email address in there taken to the offer and then you

know around 2% ergo buy okay and then you know you make the Commission so how

can we increase that this is so oh here we go alright so the one tip that I can

tell you is just make the copy congruent okay what does that mean basically what

copy is it's the wording on these pages that gets people to say yes to

purchasing okay so what you want to do throughout this entire funnel is you

affiliate marketing, affiliate marketing for beginners, affiliate marketing for beginners 2017, affiliate marketing 2017, affiliate marketing tips, affiliate marketing without a website, affiliate marketing for dummies

want to make the copy congruent and it starts with the offer okay let me show

you how to get off from Clickbank and find the copy on there but if this if

the if a copy on the offer you know they've already tested it we've already

figured out you know they've already figured out what works so don't try to

invent anything new just utilize what they're doing and again I'm going to

show you how to do this but if the offer says how to lose weight in 14 days then

you just want to reverse engineer that and go back to the squeeze page and say

how to lose for how to lose weight in 14 days and then that you want to make to

add the same thing hey you want to learn how to lose weight in 14 days click this

button or click this link and then you know then therefore it goes the squeeze

page then it goes the offer and you're just gonna have more congruence and

people are just gonna be it's gonna be a more direct offer a more direct a

message and there's gonna be more purchases because of that okay so that's

just kind of the overview let me jump into my elite pages account and I'll

show you how to build one of these out and then also you know start with

Clickbank as well okay so I'll see you in one sec alright so here we are at

clickbank.com and obviously it's free to set up just create your own account and

then once you do have your account you come in to the affiliate marketplace

okay and then we remove this you come over to a category section and you know

you just find whatever you want to promote there's so many different

categories there's a lot of subcategories as well but I like to use

health and fitness just because it kind

of make sense to everybody so you click on

that and then I'll come down to further diets and weight loss we'll just stick

with this okay so what I like to do is click on this

little drop down menu and pull it down to gravity okay because that's gonna

show you which offer is converting the best what has the highest conversion

across the board for all affiliates and everybody's sending traffic to this

offer okay so what we want to do is actually click on the offer it'll pull

up the sales page and the video will pop up here in a second let me pause that

okay so this is what I'm talking about with the headline

okay the two-week diet a foolproof science based system that guaranteed to

melt away six pounds of unwanted stubborn body fat in just 14 days no

matter how hard you tried before so they know that as a winning headline

okay it's the highest converting offer on Clickbank in terms of the weight loss

niche so they know that this works okay it's the best one that works for this

particular offer and obviously in congruence with the video so we want to

do is like we talked about we want to build a lead page that is congruent with

this so we just take this copy you know copy it we'll do that

copy and then we'll come back in to excuse me I'm gonna my leadpages account

and we'll create a new page okay so here you can choose the drag-and-drop

templates but I think the best way especially if you're just starting out

is go with standard okay click on standard and you just you can filter by

what kind of page it is so I come into opt-in pages and again just to keep this

simple we want to you know find one of the more simple ones

I'll show you where it is the one that I like you can use this one this one's

really simple well let go ahead and use this okay so obviously there's all

drag-and-drop if you're not familiar with leadpages you can change all this

type of stuff okay so what you want to do is take the headline again and just

paste this just make it good you can change it up a little bit but honestly

like you don't need to yeah that's what I'm gonna do paste that so a foolproof

science-based system that guarantees to melt away six pounds of unwanted

stubborn body fat just fourteen days no matter how hard you tried okay so just

like the headline and the sales collar in the on the sales video what I like to

do here is also put free video because like people love free obviously and you

know essentially this is a free video that explains how to do that

but it's also a sales video okay so you can leave it like that and then you know

obviously tailor all this as well or cut out that I typically take out name and

phone number I just leave the email in so obviously you want to change all this

copy make sure you know what it's saying you know free video well Beauvoir enter

your email for free video all that kind of stuff and then you want to integrate

this with Aweber as well okay it's really simple

basically a whole lot here on come back over to leadpages you want to make sure

that you integrate Aweber and leadpages together if you are using Aweber

one sec but once you integrate it should like that look like this you click on

your a Weber and then here will be all your list I have a ton of lists

obviously so you just whatever list that you're using click it and then it'll be

integrated right there and then you come and you just click on the green button

there basically where you set all this up is right up here you come down into

integrations and then here's all the integrations you can do a Weber

MailChimp get response by like Aweber hats one I

use so that's really all you do you just make sure that it's tailored to to what

you're offering you know make sure it all makes sense I'm not going to go

through this whole page but like you just customize it to what the video is

all about you can change the font and style and everything here to make it a

little look a little bit better but then the last thing that you want to do is

you want to come to the Thank You page and then here's where you put your link

okay so if we come back to Clickbank then to promote this particular product

all we have to do is click promote and then you put in your your account

nickname whatever it was when you created it and then here's your link and

then you should copy that and you come back in to leadpages you paste that

there boom you're all set to go okay okay and then you click done and save

and just save it I won't save it because I don't need to save this page once you

have it saved then you're good to go now you just start sending traffic since

starts placing ads in different places and I have a bunch of different videos

on this channel about placing ads with YouTube with being with there's free

methods there's paid methods Facebook I'll probably start putting a little bit

more Facebook training as well but again just make the make the copy congruent to

the within the ad within the landing page and within the affiliate offer and

it all starts from the affiliate offer so if you're using the Clickbank product

just you know swipe that copy and just utilize it in your entire funnel so

that's really what it comes down to and again you just gotta keep on running

that 100 click test so you start getting it start getting sales and then

eventually you're gonna start seeing sales come through and then once you

start building up a better relationship or up with your list and

the conversions are gonna start to go up okay so that's really the rundown guys

if you enjoy this video make sure and hit like and subscribe if you do it have

any comments make sure to put them down below or just hit me up on you know

Facebook or Instagram or wherever and then again if you do want to learn a

little bit more about this how do we go into a little bit more depth about this

type of stuff and how you can really turn this into a full-time income as I

have done for you know I've been doing this stuff for nearly 7 years now and

been able to travel and do a lot of cool stuff so yeah if you guys want to go

check that out it is over at mentors Nick comm there's a link down in the

video description but besides that thank you for watching this video hopefully I

helped you out and let me know how you guys are doing send me how how you're

affiliate marketing, affiliate marketing for beginners, affiliate marketing for beginners 2017, affiliate marketing 2017, affiliate marketing tips, affiliate marketing without a website, affiliate marketing for dummies

you know doing this stuff if you're getting results for not if you need help

whatever it is we'd love to see some more success stories alright guys thanks

for watching this video talk to you soon

For more infomation >> Affiliate Marketing For Beginners - Duration: 13:40.

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Kris Wu - B.M.

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NASA Silicon Valley Podcast - Episode 69 - Dennis Leveson-Gower and Shane Kimbrough - Duration: 43:59.

Gary Jordan: Houston, We Have a Podcast.

Welcome to the official podcast of the NASA Johnson Space Center, episode 20, Special Delivery

I'm Gary Jordan, and I'll be your cohost today, along with Matt Buffington, director of public

affairs at NASA's Ames Research Center in California, and the host of NASA in Silicon

Valley Podcast.

Matt, what's up?

Matthew Buffington: Hey Gary, we're doing great, so glad we could team up on this.

This is also concurrently episode 69 for the NASA in Silicon Valley Podcast.

There's a ton of overlap between our listeners, so I'm really glad we were able to make this

happen.

Gary Jordan: Yeah, me too.

Today is a very special episode, because we're teaming up with NASA in Silicon Valley Podcast

to talk about some of the things we can find in a cargo vehicle when it's shipped to space,

which is perfect because SpaceX will be sending its Dragon Cargo Vehicle to the International

Space Station here soon.

So, who do we have from Ames, Matt?

Matthew Buffington: Over here we're bringing in Dennis Leveson-Gower.

He's a project scientist here over at Ames, and has tons of experience working on cargo,

working on payloads, and sending them on up to the space station.

How about over there in Houston?

Gary Jordan: We'll have Shane Kimbrough.

He's a NASA astronaut who recently spent about six months on the space station and landed

earlier this year.

We've actually had him on the podcast to talk about his landing experience back in episode

three.

But while he was up there, he had quite a few cargo vehicles visit the station.

He had the SpaceX Dragon, Orbital ATK Cygnus, Japanese HTV, and the Russian Progress all

within his six-month stay aboard the station.

So, it's fair to say he knows what cargo on station is all about.

He performed hundreds of experiments with the science that was delivered on some of

those vehicles, and even got some fresh food, so I'm excited to ask him about that experience.

Matthew Buffington: Awesome.

I'm really excited to get the different perspective on both the science, on the space station,

so we can see the astronaut's point of view, and the people who actually design those experiments.

Gary Jordan: Yeah, this is going to be a good episode.

So, with no further delay, let's go light speed and jump right ahead to our talk with

Shane Kimbrough and Dennis Leveson-Gower. Enjoy.

Okay, all right, it looks like we're all connected, ready to go.

How about this, Houston We Have a Podcast and NASA Silicon Valley combined?

Matthew Buffington: Yeah, this is going to be sweet.

Gary Jordan: Sweet, I know, I'm pumped.

And we're doing this remotely, so here in Houston, I'm in the studio with NASA astronaut

and no stranger to Houston We Have a Podcast, Shane Kimbrough.

Shane, thanks for being here.

Shane Kimbrough: Hey, great to be here.

Gary Jordan: Cool, and how about over at Ames, Matt, who do you have?

Matthew Buffington: I'm sitting over here with my buddy Dennis Leveson-Gower.

We actually go way back from SpaceX 8, was it Dennis?

Dennis Leveson-Gower: That's right.

Matthew Buffington: I always remember it because it was the first time SpaceX had launched

a rocket and landed it on a barge.

And Dennis was nice enough as I drove him back and forth from his office to do press

interviews and stuff.

Gary Jordan: Nice enough indeed.

Matthew Buffington: Exactly.

I always like to start our podcast with the question of, how did you

get to NASA, how did you end up in Silicon Valley.

I definitely want to hear about that from Shane as well, but let's start off with Dennis.

So tell us about, how did you end up at NASA?

Dennis Leveson-Gower: I really ended up here by accident.

I was set to be a professor, discover things, have graduate students.

I did a Ph.D. in biochemistry.

Then I went to Stanford for a post-doctoral fellow doing bone marrow transplantation,

graft vs. host disease, immunology.

And slowly over the years, I thought, I'm going to go to industry.

I'm not going to do the academic track anymore.

It was a slow evolution.

So I was out there, had my resume posted on job sites and stuff, looking around.

Just got an email saying, are you interested in a position at NASA Ames?

And I'm like, this is spam.

I don't know anything about rockets, I'm not an engineer.

I'm a biologist.

So, talked to my wife.

She's like, you have to apply, it's NASA.

So I thought, all right, at least I can go and see the base and look around, because

I saw it on the side of the highway, so I knew there was some NASA thing here.

And yeah, it was when I talked to the hiring manager, she really convinced me this was

a really cool opportunity.

Got me into a different head space of not just doing basic research, but doing applied

research, and working with a whole different cadre of engineers and operations and safety.

And I don't know, it just really appealed to me, so I took a chance and took the job.

Matthew Buffington: That's pretty awesome.

I always say, when people think of NASA, they think of rockets and telescopes.

Biology is a huge part of that.

Speaking of biology, sometimes we have humans up in space.

Gary Jordan: Excellent segue.

All right, Shane, how about you?

How did you become an astronaut?

Shane Kimbrough: I came -- there's several obviously avenues to be an astronaut.

I came through the military.

I was an Army officer, Apache pilot my whole Army career.

I took a little detour toward the end of I would say my conventional Army career when

I went to graduate school at Georgia Tech, and then I went to teach math at West Point

for a few years.

And then from there, I was called to come work down at Johnson Space Center for a few

years.

I had applied to be an astronaut that year, didn't get selected.

But the good news was, I was I guess somewhat in the highly qualified category, so the Army

detachment down here asked me to come down here and work for a few years.

And that was to really get ready for the 2002 astronaut selection.

Guess what, that selection never happened.

So, we went through the whole thing, interviews and everything, and it never happened.

Congress decided they didn't need a class that year.

So, we hung around for another couple years, which in a way was somewhat rolling the dice

on my Army career.

But my wife and I felt it was where we wanted to be and what we wanted to do, so stuck around,

and was lucky enough to get selected in 2004.

Gary Jordan: Lucky and persistent enough.

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, persistence is a big trait, I think.

It was my fourth time to apply.

Matthew Buffington: I was going to say, isn't that normal for astronauts?

Because we had Steve Smith a while back on our podcast, and I think he had applied three

or four times as well.

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, I think at least it used to be the norm.

A lot of times these days, at least in the last couple classes, we've had a lot of first-timers.

But yeah, for folks a little older like myself, I think three or four times is pretty normal.

Gary Jordan: I remember talking with the 2017 class, and a couple of them applied multiple

times.

I know for sure Raja Chari did, but you're right, a couple of them are first-timers.

But then you've got folks like Clay Anderson, who applied like, what, eight or nine times

or something?

So yeah, right.

Shane Kimbrough: Persistence.

Gary Jordan: Exactly, persistence, and it works out too.

This is perfect, to combine forces for the podcast today -- Houston We Have a Podcast

and NASA in Silicon Valley -- because today's topic is cargo, and cargo going to the International

Space Station.

And Shane, I feel like you're the perfect person to have on the podcast today, because

you've seen your fair share of cargo vehicles on your last mission, right?

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, we saw everything, and we saw Cygnus twice.

We had a lot of vehicles coming and going.

And really cargo, when you think about it, it's the way we handle the logistics problem

on the space station.

It's a big logistics problem, if you think about it, to get equipment and clothes and

food and experiments to that orbiting laboratory.

So, how do we do that?

We used to do it with the space shuttle.

It was nice and easy, it could haul a bunch of stuff.

Now, we can't do that, so we have these cargo vehicles you're talking about.

Gary Jordan: That's right, because on your way to the space station, you can bring stuff,

but now you need stuff delivered.

It's a huge complex.

It's the size of a five-bedroom house, it needs stuff -- food, supplies, all that kind

of things.

Matthew Buffington: That's one of the funny things as we were coming in, especially as

we're getting closer for the SpaceX 13 launch coming into it.

We see there's the both sides -- there's the people up at the space station working on

receiving the cargo or even science experiments, but also on the flipside of, how do you get

that stuff prepared?

That is a feat in and of itself.

Gary Jordan: That's true.

So Dennis, what do you have to do to prepare stuff to go on cargo missions?

Dennis Leveson-Gower: That's a big question, because I mean, it really starts one to two

years ahead of the launch, if you think about it, or more, because after you have an experiment

defined, you've got to prepare exactly what the science requirements are, then you've

got to start making a plan, then you've got to start assessing what the hardware needs

are, and the kits' needs are, then you have to design those, then they have to get through

safety, you have to plan operations, you have to plan how everything's going to be labelled.

And then, usually I think somewhere between three and six months before a launch is when

we're going to actually have things prepared, off-gassed, tested, H-fit, label committee,

all those things, and do the early load.

And then we start preparing the late load chemicals and perishables that have to be

loaded 25 hours before launch.

And we do that out at Kennedy Space Center for SpaceX launch, anyways.

So, there's a whole experiment development cycle that happens, and that's just for one

payload.

And if we have five or six payloads from Ames coming out, that's a lot of work from a lot

of people to send a box of something.

Matthew Buffington: It takes a village for it, gathering all that stuff up.

But I'm always curious on your guys' side, Shane, for you guys, when you receive this

cargo, how exactly does that happen, or how does that work?

Like, you're unpacking a trunk from a trip?

Shane Kimbrough: No, we're always excited to open up the hatch and get new stuff.

It's kind of like Christmas every time we get one of these vehicles up there.

But the way we go about unpacking is very organized, and it has to be that way.

We have a great team on the ground that gets us ready and prepared with all kind of documents,

and keeps us organized with charts and things on how they want it to be unpacked.

And so, we follow that religiously.

We'll have somebody in the crew is going to be called the loadmaster, and that person's

responsible for that vehicle.

If we just start pulling things out and stowing things where we want to stow them, that's

not the way it's going to be, because we'll never find that stuff.

We really have to be disciplined, and put things where they're supposed to go.

A lot of times, that means we'll take one bag out, and the bag will have 100 different

items in it.

And we have to go put those 100 things somewhere.

So, it's not as easy as pulling a bag out and stuffing it somewhere.

Sometimes it is, but most of the time it's not.

So, we've really got to make sure we're all helping each other out.

And it's always better to, as I've found with all these cargo ops, to do it as a team versus

doing it individually.

You're much more efficient, and you can have one person reading the book, keeping control

of everything, and the other couple people running things around.

And that really worked well for us.

Gary Jordan: So, everything has an order and a destination, right?

You've got to unload this first, and put it in this location, and it's all scheduled that

way.

How long does it take you to unload completely?

Shane Kimbrough: I think we actually set some records for unloading vehicles the quickest,

which is a good thing I guess.

But, we really -- and we did it by working together as a team.

And that's the only way.

Thomas [Pesquet] and Peggy [Whitson] and I would knock out a vehicle, no kidding, in

a day and a half or two.

But, that's pretty unusual.

That was kind of if it happened to show up just before a weekend, we used the weekend

to do it, so it was a freebie.

Where if they had it just playing out during a normal week, it would take a week to two

weeks sometimes depending on the vehicle to get it unloaded.

Gary Jordan: That's right, because you've got to fit it with everything else you're

doing.

Wow, amazing.

Matthew Buffington: Yeah, and a lot of that, I'd imagine it's already complicated enough,

and I'm sure it's crazy complicated even just within NASA, but then you start throwing in

all these private companies and different groups.

Is everybody, how do you keep -- maybe you guys could talk about, how do you keep everybody

on the same page on how things get prepared.

Because Dennis, you're preparing this stuff for these companies, but then . . .

Dennis Leveson-Gower: I think they all go through NASA.

You'll have private hardware developers, but the manifest is controlled through NASA, and

the crew procedures are controlled through NASA.

Shane, correct me if I'm wrong, but at some certain point has to be layered into the controlled

process of NASA, even if it's like -- so, you could think of it as NASA buying things

from different vendors, but they'll manage how it goes up, or they'll manage it through

SpaceX how it goes up.

Shane Kimbrough: Totally agree.

We saw differences, of course, because the vehicles are all different inside, so the

way they, location coding is all different, and where things might be on one is different

than another.

That's the only difference, but bottom line is, you're going to get a bag, you're going

to take it somewhere, you're going to take it apart, and take those things somewhere.

And if we keep it pretty simple like that, it made it easier on the crew.

Gary Jordan: Definitely.

You're the pro mover when it comes to cargo missions.

Shane Kimbrough: I'm going to get a reputation here.

Gary Jordan: So what are some of the main differences, then, in terms of, Dennis, on

your end, for qualifications, and we can start with that -- what's the difference to get

it on that vehicle?

But then Shane, for unpacking it, some of those little tiny things?

Dennis Leveson-Gower: The biggest thing for us is always safety.

We go to great lengths to try to have chemicals that will not interfere with the life support

system, that won't be toxic to the crew if they're spilled.

Everything that has a tox level will have certain levels of containers and containment

that have to be layered onto how it's packaged and how it's stored.

Then, we have human factors.

We have to make sure that the 5 percent Japanese female and the 5 percent American male can

handle the things.

And then, even right before it's loaded, there's an expert that comes in with gloves on and

feels everything, to make sure there's no sharp edges on anything, and that it's not

going to hurt anybody when they start pulling them out of the packages.

That's what I've seen on my end, big picture.

Shane Kimbrough: I'd say from our end, it's very similar, like I mentioned before.

But there are some things.

Every vehicle that gets there, there's some critical items that need to come off first.

And we're well aware of what those are, based on the ground team prepping us for that.

And most of the time, those are delicate experiments or things like that that have to come off,

or are time-sensitive.

We'll obviously hit those first, and then after that we'll follow the script that the

ground lays out for us, so that we're all on the same sheet of music, and everybody

knows what's going on.

Even if we're doing it in our spare time, where the ground control team might not be

following, we can update them with, hey, we did sections two, three, and four, whatever

it was, and they'll be caught back up with us when they get back on console.

Gary Jordan: Yeah, like if you're doing it on a weekend or something.

Sweet.

So, what's an example of time-critical, since you unpacked so many vehicles, what's an example

of a time-critical experiment you had to unpack?

Shane Kimbrough: We had some rodents onboard, so that was one thing we had to get off.

Those are always time-critical, just to get them setup in their habitations on the space

station.

That's one.

I think some that just showed up today actually on the space station were things like pizza

and ice cream.

If you get things like that, those are time-critical, because you need to eat those quickly.

Anyway, there's plenty of different, a wide range there I gave you from rodents to ice

cream.

Matthew Buffington: And I have to chime in on that, because this isn't just the sad,

dehydrated stuff you buy at the museum.

This is a legit pizza.

Shane Kimbrough: This is the real deal, apparently.

It's the first time I've heard of a pizza delivery going to the space station, so whatever

company got that is going . . .

Matthew Buffington: 30 minutes or less.

Dennis Leveson-Gower: It's not going to be the best pizza, but it'll probably taste good

to you guys.

Shane Kimbrough: Ice cream's legit, though.

Of course, we didn't have any when I was there, but shortly after I left, they got some, and

they're getting some today.

Gary Jordan: They waited until right after you left?

Oh, man.

Shane Kimbrough: Apparently so.

Dennis Leveson-Gower: After SpaceX 8 launched, all the guys on the ground at KSC had all

these Klondike bars filling the freezer.

And I'm like, where did these come from?

And they go, the CMC team, the cargo team, when they were packing all the cold stowage,

if there's any empty areas in the freezers, they start stuffing ice cream bars in there,

as a surprise for the crew.

So, we have extra boxes of Klondike bars.

Shane Kimbrough: Always a welcome treat.

Matthew Buffington: But, when you're unpacking during this, are you in constant contact with

the ground, and they're walking you through it, or it's just a mix of sometimes you are,

sometimes you guys get your to-do list and you make it happen and update them later on?

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, we have a couple meetings beforehand, of course, before the vehicle

gets there, and there's a whole choreography they want us to do, and the order they want

us to do it in.

And so, we're disciplined and follow that to the T. A lot of times we'd have questions,

or something wouldn't be where it was supposed to be, and that's where we'd call down real

quickly and touch base with whoever was on console for that, so that we weren't getting

out of their choreography, even if something wasn't there.

But they were always there if we needed them.

Usually, we would just tag up at the end of a day, end of a cargo day, and make sure to

tell them exactly what we did so they were up to speed on everything.

Gary Jordan: I don't know if you got any Klondike bars.

Was there any missions that gave you some nice treats?

Shane Kimbrough: I think almost every vehicle had care packages from our families onboard.

Those are always a surprise, so that was kind of cool.

We didn't get any ice cream, but we got a lot of fresh fruit, and that was kind of cool.

That's another thing I think they hold onto, and if there's any extra space they'll cram

them in there.

But, some apples and oranges and things like that were really delicious after not having

them for quite a while.

Gary Jordan: I was going to say, definitely a treat compared to -- it's fresh, it's literally

fresh.

Shane Kimbrough: We ate those really quickly.

Gary Jordan: You kind of have to.

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, don't want them to go bad.

Matthew Buffington: I'm wondering, if you get into the coordination that's needed, and

even thinking on the side when, we have researchers, scientists who are creating science experiments,

it's hard enough doing it in a lab on your own.

And so, when people are -- I'm wondering, Dennis, from your perspective as people design

and put these experiments together, but then Dennis -- or, Shane, on your side, actually

conducting these things.

Talk a little about that, what goes into making an experiment for someone else to do, and

your instructions on how to do it?

It seems very complicated.

I'm looking at you, Dennis.

Dennis Leveson-Gower: Okay, what I'll receive is basically a grant proposal that had a very

high science score from a panel of reviewers.

And then I'll start looking at it and saying, can we actually do this in space?

Because, crew time is very precious.

You cannot do things as quickly in space as you can on the ground.

We add a 1.4 margin of how long it would take us on earth, at a minimum.

It's all got to be done in a self-contained glove box volume.

And, I start working to make little tweaks and adjustments -- like I said, can we replace

this chemical with a nontoxic one?

Can we simplify this procedure?

What's the tolerance of the timeline?

Because, if they have to do an EVA, we can't have a time-critical part of our experiment

at the same time they've got to be outside the station.

So, we start looking at every single factor, and it takes month to organize that.

But then, eventually we get that down into a set of crew procedures, just like written,

step-by-step, everything to do, and it should be simple as possible, even though these astronauts

are super well trained and super smart.

We make these super simple documents to send them.

It's kind of funny.

And then the training happens at JSC, where an experienced scientist will go and work

with the astronauts, and make a fighter pilot into a biologist.

And then we send everything up.

And then on my end, we're sitting in a control room watching a live video of the astronauts.

It's very cool.

And, talking to them.

And usually, there's one designated person with the best speaking voice talking, and

then there's five people in the room behind them with total chaos, yelling it's storage

locker 5B, 6-Alpha, and they go, storage locker 5-6-B-Alpha.

And then, we just are in their ear, pretty much, walking them through what we need them

to do.

I know there's simpler payloads, where I think Shane would say you just follow written instruction,

but for some of the more complicated things, we're actually talking to them, walking them

through it.

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, it's very helpful to have Dennis and his team there talking to

us.

These scientists in general have spent many years creating whatever the experiment is.

The last thing we want to do is mess it up, or mess up any of their data.

So, we want to be very careful in all that whole process Dennis explained about getting

the experiment approved and then what he's got to do to get it in a crew procedure.

That takes a lot of people a lot of time.

And so, by the time it gets to us, it's pretty well refined.

It's not perfect, because I haven't seen that procedure, and I might read something differently

than Dennis would read it.

So, it is so nice to have them on the horn, so to speak, right there talking to us in

case we have any questions, so we don't mess up any of the experiment or any of the data.

Gary Jordan: That's true.

And then off of Dennis' point of making them as simple as possible, a lot of it has to

do with the fact that, you're right, these scientists spend so much time getting these

procedures ready for this experiment, but that's not the only one you're doing.

You are doing quite a few experiments.

Shane Kimbrough: Very true, and in general, we're not trained on all these.

We're trained generically on experiments.

Like Dennis alluded to, making a pilot a biologist for a day.

I was lucky enough to have Peggy there, who is a biologist, so she could help me understand

something that normally I wouldn't understand, because it's not in my background.

But Dennis and his team can get some really complicated experiment into a procedure that's

simple, like he said, so that even I can understand it.

That's pretty good.

Gary Jordan: So, what else do you have to train for, besides the scientific experiments?

Because Dennis also talked about, you have to train for EVAs, and on this last mission

you did four, so that's quite a big chunk of time that takes away from science.

And then you've got to train for unloading cargo vehicles.

What else are you training for?

Shane Kimbrough: Those are the big ones.

Of course, the cargo vehicles when they come up, we actually use the robotic arm to grab

them, to capture them.

So, a lot of our training is with the robotics team to make sure we do that operation successfully.

Grabbing something that's going 17,500 miles an hour is not trivial.

But, with our training, we always train of course for the worst-case scenarios, and the

vehicles, at least when I was there, behaved very well.

It seemed like it was simple, even though the stress is pretty high, the gains are up,

because it's a real vehicle and you want to make sure we grab this thing and get it onboard.

So, that's another piece of our training we do.

What else?

Those are the big-ticket items.

Operationally, EVAs, like you talked about, robotics, when we're capturing these vehicles,

and most of the other time we're doing experiments.

That makes up most of our days onboard the space station.

Gary Jordan: Yeah.

Was it different to use the robotic arm to capture the different vehicles, or did it

translate pretty well?

Shane Kimbrough: There are differences certainly with every vehicle.

So, we had Cygnus, we had SpaceX, we had HTV from Japan, and we had a Russian vehicle,

but that one docks automatically, so we didn't have to reach out with the robotic arm to

grab that one.

But, there are several differences, and the cues you use are different for every vehicle.

Again, we get spun up by our training team a week or two prior to each vehicle showing

up, so we remember you're looking here, not here, based on whatever the vehicle was, and

using certain cues to help get the vehicle onboard.

Matthew Buffington: I'd imagine no matter how much you train on that, and I'm sure there's

simulations and different things of remoting the giant robotic arm, I imagine once you're

doing that for the first time, it's got to be nerve-wracking, because you're like, this

is a very expensive toy, I don't want to mess this up.

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, it was on the first time.

And again, we got several opportunities, so I won't say it became less important, but

you got more comfortable with it.

But, it is a big deal.

And I really wanted Tomas, the French astronaut I was flying with, to get a lot of experiment.

So, when we were together, I grabbed the first one, and after that I let him grab all the

other ones, to get his experience level up.

And he'll go fly again here in a few years, hopefully, and be able to use all that experience

to help his crewmates out when he's onboard.

Gary Jordan: Definitely.

When you're training to capture these things, like Matt was saying, when you're in the real

thing, it's a little bit different, but the training, I've seen it before.

It's pretty detailed.

There's a projection of, it's like a, I don't know, describe the training.

Shane Kimbrough: We have this, we call it a dome facility, because that's what it is,

and the graphics are just fantastic.

And it gives you the sense of speed in which things are coming together, and the rates that

you're coming are very good.

But, it's just not the real thing.

It's like our pool.

Our pool is amazing to train for space walks, but it's not the real thing.

There are differences.

And until you get up there -- and now, we're in the Kupla, we're flying almost all of

these out of the Kupla, which maybe think about you're upside down flying it, so spatially

you've got to get your head around where are the arms moving even though you're upside

down, those kind of things.

It's not super simple until you actually get up there and do it a few times, and then it

becomes a little bit easier on the mind.

Gary Jordan: I can see why they would put you through the training for it, because there's

a lot to think about, just being upside down, using the controls, controlling something

from a Cupola, but then the arm's over here, I guess.

Shane Kimbrough: Right.

So, it's not necessarily right out your window.

It is in this case when you're in the Kupla, but you could fly it from the lab as well,

and you wouldn't have any windows and you'd just be using cameras.

That's what we used to do.

That's what we did on my first flight.

So, things have gotten a lot better in that regard.

Gary Jordan: I'm sure they write these procedures to be as easy as possible, so Dennis, what

are some of the techniques you do whenever you're writing these scientific procedures

for the astronauts to make it as easy as possible for them?

Dennis Leveson-Gower: Yeah, I mean, we try to boil it down to step-by-step, but also

add in some rationale for why you're doing it a certain way, so they don't have to memorize

the exact step, but they can know what the end goal is and why they're doing it, so they

know I should make sure I keep this cold, or I should make sure I handle this gently.

And then hopefully, that helps.

But I find that most of the time, it boils down to, we have the procedure, but then they

say, tell me what to do next, and we're just talking to them.

Shane Kimbrough: Especially when we're in the glove box.

We're immobile when we're in there.

We can't move around and do things.

Dennis Leveson-Gower: Yeah, and how do you read something when you're doing that?

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, so it's very helpful to have you guys onboard.

Matthew Buffington: And for me, going back, one thing that occurred to me as you're dealing

with some, if it's a sensitive science experiment or the precious pizza cargo, I wonder, when

you're packing, obviously there's a little bit of Tetris, where you're trying to place

things into the cargo to be very efficient.

But it's also, launches are quite intense.

So I'd imagine, Dennis, I'd imagine things have to be durable enough to survive such

a crazy, extreme, launching, and then it's floating in space, and then the big robotic

arm that Shane's operating is grabbing it.

But then also, on the flipside, Shane, I'd imagine for you, being a human experiencing

that sensation as well.

But what goes into keeping things safe and packed in?

Dennis Leveson-Gower: Yeah, for especially things like the rodent habitat, we strap it

to a table and we vibrate the heck out of it.

It goes through launch impact testing, it gets put through temperatures, it goes through

pressurization, depressurization.

Anything like that goes through rigorous testing to make sure it stands up to things.

And then, it's usually packed in some foam, into a locker.

Then, it's put on a scale so that you can find the center of gravity of that hardware,

and also the weight and dimensions.

And then from that, some eggheads do some math, and some robots load it into the capsule

the right way so it's all balanced.

I don't understand all that part.

But, we just make sure that we've tested everything, whatever.

And I mean, it's pretty excessive.

Whatever could possibly go wrong, we test, worst-case, and then we treat it as gently

as possible.

And yeah, then wrap it up and ship it up.

Matthew Buffington: And how is that, Shane, from your perspective being the human inside

said rocket, vibrating and going through those intense pressures?

Shane Kimbrough: On the Soyuz, which is what I just flew on, I was very surprised on the

launch how smooth it was.

I had an experience on the space shuttle before, and it was rocking and rolling and shaking

around like you'd imagine, and you see in the movies.

But the Soyuz was super smooth.

We pulled about 3Gs going uphill, but the ride itself was very smooth.

I was very impressed.

Matthew Buffington: So, not only designing the experiments and getting them up, but you'd

mentioned before, Dennis, that it could take years in this process.

I'd imagine there's several experiments and ideas that never get into Shane's hands.

Or, great ideas that just, either it's funding or different things.

It's a competitive process, and everybody wants their cool science experiment to go

up.

Dennis Leveson-Gower: Yeah, no, we have a queue of investigators going out to 2022.

We're trying to get them flown off as fast as possible, but we're limited by launch vehicles

and crew time.

Crew time is becoming less of a concern, because we're getting an extra crew member up there.

But now it's launch vehicles, and you can only launch so many experiments at a time.

But, there's a whole list of reserve experiments, of people that have put their heart and soul

into something, and they just need 15 minutes of crew time, and they're just hoping their

experiment can get done.

Matthew Buffington: This is stuff that's already up there?

Dennis Leveson-Gower: I think they have over 100 experiments at a time on the ISS.

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, I think we ended up doing 273, I was told, over the six months.

But yeah, at any one time, there can be over 100 onboard, that's about right.

Dennis Leveson-Gower: And I remember someone saying, Peggy's going to get every one of

those done.

She's going to work through the backlog.

Matthew Buffington: Singlehandedly.

Shane Kimbrough: We took out all the task list and all the things that were backlogged,

for sure.

So, it was nice.

Dennis Leveson-Gower: Yeah, a lot of people over here appreciate it when you guys give

up some of your free time and bang one of those experiments out.

Shane Kimbrough: Glad to do it.

Gary Jordan: That's true.

What else, besides if you were to take the weekend to unpack a cargo vehicle, what else

are you doing on the weekends?

Shane Kimbrough: Weekends, generally on Saturday mornings, it's spent cleaning.

So, it's like your house, about once a week you need to probably do a little cleaning.

So, we spend all Saturday morning vacuuming the whole station, wiping things down, and

just getting everything back in shape after usually a busy week.

And then, Saturday afternoons are generally off, and Sundays are generally off.

So, I'm a big sports fan, so I was usually watching games, whether it was football or

World Series or anything going on.

Tomas got us into watching rugby.

So, that was big in Europe at the time.

So, we got to watch some of those matches.

So, we do that as a crew sometimes, or sometimes individually you'd watch those things.

And you certainly can catch up on emails or watch movies or call home or any of those

things as well.

Or, you can just look out the window, which was always spectacular, something you can't

do here on earth.

So, I tried to do that more often, because I can always talk to people or email people

when I'm on earth, but I can't always look out the Kupla window for a rev around the

earth in 90 minutes.

That was pretty cool.

Matthew Buffington: I'm curious, how is that setup?

You don't have a normal weekend like you would.

It's not like you're commuting home and spending the weekend with your family.

You're sitting there floating in space, so there's never really a day off.

You're always on.

Shane Kimbrough: Correct.

So I had to, when I was the commander, I made it clear to my crew that we were going to

work from DBC to DBC, which is the morning conference with mission control all the way

to the evening conference with mission control, but we weren't going to work outside of that.

And there were a few exceptions on the weekends where we'd say, there's this one cargo vehicle,

for example, we want to unload.

Let's do two hours, and that's it.

We're going to work two hours together.

If you've got three people, that equates to about six hours of work.

And we can do a lot in two hours.

But I would make sure we weren't working all weekend, because as the commander, I've got

to make sure the crew is not exhausted, for one, so they can hit the next week's activities

when Monday starts.

But also, we've got to always be ready for that really bad day, an emergency onboard

the space station, where that's in the middle of the night or during the day.

The crew's got to be fresh enough to handle that.

So, I'm always thinking about that as I'm working the crew and the crew's being worked

by the ground.

And sometimes, we have to modify what they want us to do in order to keep our reserves,

so to speak, to be able to handle an emergency.

Gary Jordan: That's right.

So, as a commander, how much jurisdiction do you have on time, because I know they schedule

a lot of things for you, but then what power do you have as a commander?

Shane Kimbrough: Big picture, we'll talk.

I'll talk with the lead flight director usually before the week, or maybe even two weeks out.

We'll talk about the big picture, how things are going to flow, and what they want to get

done.

And then, the details just kind of flush out.

I don't really have too much influence on that.

I'll let the flight director know, here's what I want to focus on.

Make sure we get maybe a day here or there because we worked last weekend, and those

kind of things, because that happens a lot.

And then in general, if something's coming up real-time, day-of, maybe an experiment

or something is running twice as long as it was expected -- that happens.

And we'll just adjust real-time.

Maybe I'll take the activity that Peggy was supposed to do next, if she's buried in this

experiment, or vice versa.

We'll help each other out to get all the things done.

And you do that almost daily.

You get done with something early, you go help somebody else if you can, or else you

take something else off their timeline by knocking out something down the road for them.

Gary Jordan: Sounds like you guys were really tightknit.

You guys needed to be a really tight team to get all this stuff done.

Shane Kimbrough: Totally agree, and I was super fortunate to have Peggy and Tomas onboard

for about 90 percent of my time onboard.

I was with Kate [Rubins] and Takuya [Onishi] for only a week or so, unfortunately for me,

because they were superstars as well.

But, they left shortly after we got there.

So really, my whole mission was with Peggy and Tomas on the US side.

And we did really work well together.

We thought the same, our work ethic was the same, and we just loved helping each other

out and loved being around each other, which doesn't always happen.

So, I was very fortunate.

Gary Jordan: Very true.

That makes me -- getting back on track to the cargo stuff, I was actually thinking about,

we were talking a lot about when cargo comes up, how to get it, how to unpack it, but then,

there's a packing story, and they're different for each vehicle, because some of them just

burn up, some of them have experiments running before they burn up, and then some of them

actually come back.

What are some of the differences there?

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah, so we had all those.

The only one that comes back to earth, as you're probably aware, is SpaceX.

So, anything that's real critical experiment-wise, or even maybe broken equipment that engineers

want to get their hands on to figure out what happened to it, those kind of things we'll

put into SpaceX, so they can come back to the ground.

A lot of that has to do with experiments we did on our bodies -- blood draws and those

kind of things need to come back, as well as rodent research things will come back on

SpaceX, because the scientists need to recover them and look at the data and get all that

stuff.

That's one thing.

All the other vehicles in general burn up, like you mentioned.

So to me, I think of it, that's how we manage our trash.

That's how we manage trash on the space station.

We crate tons of trash, believe it or not, up there, whether it's food trash or clothes

trash or experiment trash or waste, human waste.

All that stuff needs to get off at some point.

And the way we do that is to use these cargo vehicles that are not coming back to earth.

And we can't just cram things in there, like you might think.

It's a very organized way.

And again, we'll get a plan from the ground team and mission control that lays out how

they want us to pack it.

And a lot of times there are experiments onboard that will happen once it leaves the space

station before it gets burned up, like you mentioned.

So, we've got to make sure certain aisle ways are clear, and the airflow is going to be

correct, so that those experiments can happen correctly.

Gary Jordan: I see.

So, it's kind of like a supply chain, really, because there needs to be new stuff sent up

to the International Space Station, and then you need to take some of the old stuff out.

That's the cycle that keeps the ISS going.

Shane Kimbrough: Correct.

And launch delays and things don't happen, and these launches aren't always happening

on time.

So, sometimes your trash backlog gets pretty high on the space station.

That's not a -- there are some odors and things that go along with that.

So, we always like to have vehicles coming frequently, so we can manage our trash, of

course along with doing great experiments as well.

Gary Jordan: But you guys have plenty of food and all that kind of stuff, right?

So, even if something gets delayed, you'll be set for a while, for at least a lot of

things.

Shane Kimbrough: Yeah.

I think they have about a six-month reserve onboard.

So, we can handle a lot of delays, I guess.

Gary Jordan: Dennis, on your end, when it comes to these experiments coming back to

earth, and especially on SpaceX, the ones you actually can get your hands on and don't

burn up, what are some of the things you're looking at for those?

Dennis Leveson-Gower: Looking at getting it back as quickly as possible is usually our

priority, especially with rodent experiments, cell science experiments.

You're trying to study the effects of microgravity on these organisms, and the minute you start

getting back into the earth's atmosphere, you're going to start to experience gravity

and see molecular changes.

So, the clock is ticking to try to get the samples back.

So in the future, hopefully return vehicles can land on solid ground, and we get the samples

back even faster.

Right now, it's taking about a day or two on a boat in the ocean.

But yeah, the priority's obviously for animal experiments, we want all of them alive and

happy.

And so far, we've done it twice and they have been.

JAXA has also done it twice.

All the mice did really well on return.

And, yeah, intact samples kept at the right stowage temperatures and everything, then

we're happy.

Matthew Buffington: On a similar note, and this is a slight pivot, but I love the little

catchphrase of working off the earth for the earth.

We've talked a lot about how it all happens, from an idea, an experiment, it's created,

it's packed, it's sent up, then you actually conduct it.

But, I'd love to pick your brain, Dennis and also Shane, of the why.

Why is doing experiments in microgravity important?

Clearly NASA and the international community is spending a lot of money to put this thing

up here.

And, what can we get out of that that you just can't do on the ground?

Dennis Leveson-Gower: Yeah, there's a lot that we can't do on the ground.

My bias is that we want to go to Mars, and we want to explore space, and we want to make

Star Trek real, so we should be figuring out what happens to our bodies, what happens to

physical processes on a cellular level, really understand the biology and what changes when

the vector of gravity is removed.

Of course, there is objectives to benefit the earth, as you say, and one prime example

is, you can't have forced bedrest of research animals, but if they're in space, all the

gravity load is off, and it will mimic conditions where people have extended bedrest or unloading

on their muscles.

You also, microgravity seems to have an accelerated aging effect, so you can look at age-related

factors.

You have fluid shifts, and basically high blood pressure in your brain, and that starts

affecting the astronauts' vision and things like that, and we want to understand how that

works.

So, you have a lot of, like, growing 3D tissues in the lab.

To be able to do those kind of things, you may be able to do them better in space, and

understand the processes better in space.

And I think it directly translates into, benefits the earth.

Sometimes, you have to connect the dots a little bit to see how that space research

affects the ground, but if you look at every experiment we've done, it always has spin-off

benefits.

Shane Kimbrough: Tough to add much to that.

It's very true.

The way I look at it is, everything we do up there is either for future exploration,

like Dennis mentioned, or it's to help humanity in general.

If we're not doing that, I think we're really missing the boat.

But everything we touch up there and I've been involved with has met one of those two criteria

One example I like to think of is, we have this machine up there that makes water.

It takes every bit of liquid onboard the space station, from urine to sweat to condensation

to anything, and it goes into this machine and it makes water that's extremely pure that

we use for our food and our drinks the next day, so to speak.

It's a great technology for us to have.

It's not something we have to have for the space station, but we will have to have something

like that for Mars, or the moon, or wherever we're going to go deep space.

So, we're working on that now for future exploration.

A side benefit of this whole thing is, we actually use that technology on earth as well.

There's third-world countries that don't have clean water supplies, and the same technology

is helping them get clean water.

That's really a cool thing when you're helping future exploration and you're helping humanity.

Gary Jordan: Yeah, especially with, that's just one example, right?

That's one thing on the station that's helping in both directions.

Matt, I think that's a really good place to end the podcast.

Matthew Buffington: I think that's perfect, dude.

Gary Jordan: I think that's fantastic, because it kind of sums up why do we do all the science,

and why the science goes up and down to the International Space Station.

Guys, thanks so much for coming on the show, both to Shane and Dennis for coming on Houston

We Have a Podcast and NASA in Silicon Valley, the first time we're doing this together.

Matt, I really hope we can do this again.

Matthew Buffington: With our powers combined, it works out.

Thanks a lot for helping pull this together.

This has been a lot of fun.

Gary Jordan: Yeah, absolutely.

Thanks, guys.

Shane Kimbrough: It was great, thanks everybody.

Dennis Leveson-Gower: Thanks for having me.

Matthew Buffington: Huge thanks to Dennis and Shane.

Awesome.

For more infomation >> NASA Silicon Valley Podcast - Episode 69 - Dennis Leveson-Gower and Shane Kimbrough - Duration: 43:59.

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Wolverine's New Life | X-Men Origins Wolverine (2009) Movie Clip - Duration: 1:58.

Why are you up so early?

Come here.

See you, baby.

Hey.

Oh, that's nice. Yes. Take your time.

You're wrapped, man.

For more infomation >> Wolverine's New Life | X-Men Origins Wolverine (2009) Movie Clip - Duration: 1:58.

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I Learned Japanese From Karaoke! Driving Fast Cars and Singing Can Teach You Foreign Language Too! - Duration: 11:43.

I'm driving a Lexus RC F today.

Whenever I get into a new car, I always like to sing Japanese songs too!!

F@#K!!!!

F@#K YOU!

F@#K YOU!

I like KOBUKURO a lot!

Here comes a cool car!!

Fukuyama-san: I love your music!! I really do!

I would love an invite one of your concerts!

Will you ever do a concert in the USA?

For some reason I start speeding singing all the good parts of the song!

SPITZ is ok, but....

Get out of the way!!!

Why are you driving like that!!??!!

What the hell are you doing?????!!!!!

JELLO: I like your music!!!

Here is my white guy version!! LOL

I gotta slow down!! This song makes me speed!!

I like Japanese traditional Enka songs.

If you know any great Enka songs, please tell me!!

There is so much traffic!!

I hate traffic!

But with Karaoke in the car, time passes fast!!!

X-Japan is cool!

For more infomation >> I Learned Japanese From Karaoke! Driving Fast Cars and Singing Can Teach You Foreign Language Too! - Duration: 11:43.

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All 8 Extreme Childhood Food Allergies Are Also Common Ingredients in CDC recommended Vaccines — Coi - Duration: 7:59.

All 8 Extreme Childhood Food Allergies Are Also Common Ingredients in CDC-recommended

Vaccines � Coincidence

Food allergy awareness posters in elementary schools list the following 8 food products

as the most popular food allergies among children. Allergic reactions from exposure, consumption

or injection of these foods can be fatal.

Those 8 ingredients include peanuts, nuts, wheat, soy, milk, eggs, fish and shellfish.

If your M.D. tells you that your food allergies are hereditary, maybe that�s because your

parents were injected with the same food �excipients� when they got their dozens of vaccines growing

up.

Either you inherited your parent�s allergies, or millions of humans are simply allergic

to injecting proteins, foreign animal blood cells, aborted baby blood cells, known carcinogens,

and heavy metal toxins directly into their muscle tissue and blood, which would make

perfect sense for any normal person with a perfectly functioning immune system.

Exposing the link: Serum sickness and extreme food allergies

Could vaccine food ingredients be the �inexplicable� reason millions of American children can�t

even be in the same room where someone else opens a package of nuts?

Consider this: Peanut oils were first used as carriers in influenza vaccines in the mid-1960s,

thought to enhance the vaccine�s strength.

Before that, anaphylactic shock �syndrome� from exposure to nuts was virtually nonexistent.

Nobody was fainting and suffering from respiratory distress and experiencing convulsions just

because somebody ate a Snickers bar on the other side of the room.

Today, peanut allergy is the #1 cause of death from food reactions, and it�s primarily

among children.

Coincidence? The reaction surge kicked into full force in the early 1990s. Is that because

the mandated schedule of CDC-approved vaccines for children (before they turn age 7) doubled

from the 1980s? It has more than doubled again since then! Take a look.

1980: 20 vaccines 1995: 40 vaccines

2011 � 2017: 68 vaccines (36 of those vaccines are administered before the age of 18 months)

That means nearly all of the vaccines given in the first 7 years of life in 1995 are now

ALL given in the first 18 months of life. Maybe we should rename the top 8 food allergies

�serum sickness.� Then the root cause would be realized and maybe doctors who actually

understand nutrition (naturopaths) could step in and do something to reverse the �epidemic.�

As discovered over 100 years ago by Dr Charles Richet, anaphylactic reactions to certain

foods are a result of intact proteins that bypass the digestive system and find their

way into the blood. This is a universal trigger for allergic reactions in all animals.

Interesting. The initial �sensitization� involves injection, which creates the hypersensitivity,

and the later violent and sometimes deadly reaction comes from eating the same food.

Dr. Richet worked primarily with eggs, milk and meat proteins.

Bacteria, viruses, pathogens and parasites thrive in egg and milk, and are carried like

a time release capsule in peanut oil

Peanut adjuvants in vaccines in America is a huge secret. Vaccine manufacturers are NOT

required anymore to disclose all of the ingredients in vaccines, and they are also NOT allowed

to be sued by anyone, ever, for injuries from reactions to the injections.

The full formula for any vaccine is never revealed on the vaccine insert information

page, because the full formula contains �proprietary� information and is protected as intellectual

property.

The FDA admits peanut protein traces persist in vaccines today. This is exactly why doctors

are directed to inject vaccines intramuscular rather than intravenous, because there�s

a better chance of absorption of intact proteins and less chance of a bad reaction.

Still, no money has ever been allocated from the National Institute of Health (NIH) or

the CDC to study the obvious connection between vaccine food protein excipients and food allergies.

(The vaccine industry will never allow the unvaccinated population to serve as a control

group for this testing, knowing the results that will be found.)

It�s obvious that medical extremism is at an all-time high right now in America. You

really have to look out for yourself and your family.

Important considerations regarding food allergies in relation to common vaccine ingredients

Initial warning signs and symptoms of allergic reactions to foods found in vaccines include

mouth tingling, itching or metallic taste; also hives. Got wheat allergies?

Is the allergy really to wheat or is it to yeast protein and yeast extract, that are

both common ingredients in vaccines? Just check experimental jabs like the Cholera vaccine,

Hep B, HPV, Meningococcal and Pneumococcal.

Got milk and dairy allergies? Check vaccines for casein derivatives called Miller or Mueller

medium, and also lactose in the Hib vaccine. Plus, casamino acids are derived from cow�s

milk, such as in DTaP vaccine.

Many parents report children�s allergic reaction to the DTaP jab immediately after

injection. Also beware because there is hydrolyzed casein in the meningococcus vaccine.

Got soy allergies? Did you know that Soy peptone broth is used in vaccines to enrich salmonella

and cultivate microorganisms, including fungi?

Got fish allergies? Some oral vaccines contain fish oil. Allergic to shellfish? Read this

informative blog at Cure Zone about the link to certain vaccines.

Got egg allergies? Eggs are in all flu vaccines and the yellow fever jab. Egg proteins are

present in the final product also.

Also, children with the following allergies should have their parents check every single

vaccine insert, including flu shots, for the following popular allergens that are found

in many vaccines or the packaging, vial or syringe stopper: Latex, mercury, gelatin,

antibiotics, formaldehyde, fetal cells from abortions, aluminum, MSG (monosodium glutamate),

African Green Monkey kidney cells and polysorbate 80.

Vaccines are also now linked to learning disabilities, not just allergies! Look into natural immunity

builders that have worked for millennia, including oil of oregano, chaga mushrooms, vitamin D3

and vitamin C.

Maybe the secret to immunity and avoiding creating food allergies is to never inject

food proteins, heavy metal toxins, gelatin, urea (animal urine) and other known carcinogens

(like methyl mercury, aluminum and formaldehyde) into your muscle tissue. This is worthy of

much careful consideration.

For more infomation >> All 8 Extreme Childhood Food Allergies Are Also Common Ingredients in CDC recommended Vaccines — Coi - Duration: 7:59.

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花のコースターA-7【かぎ針編み】編み図・字幕解説 Crochet Flower Coaster / Crochet and Knitting Japan - Duration: 17:55.

For more infomation >> 花のコースターA-7【かぎ針編み】編み図・字幕解説 Crochet Flower Coaster / Crochet and Knitting Japan - Duration: 17:55.

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Verdade Nua!! Começa hoje nova temporada de Só Levando. - Duration: 3:20.

For more infomation >> Verdade Nua!! Começa hoje nova temporada de Só Levando. - Duration: 3:20.

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7 Days to Die | Settler's Mod Ep16 | Single Player Live - Duration: 1:58:59.

For more infomation >> 7 Days to Die | Settler's Mod Ep16 | Single Player Live - Duration: 1:58:59.

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Paco Jémez deja de ser entrenador de Cruz Azul - Duration: 0:49.

For more infomation >> Paco Jémez deja de ser entrenador de Cruz Azul - Duration: 0:49.

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The Power of Habit One of the most Motivational Talks Ever - Duration: 10:14.

I just did a podcast on habits right how to be able to adopt new habits and also

delete and get rid of you know break bad habits right and so a lot of people

always wanted to make it usually make a change on behavior they want to get

themselves to workout they want to get them as a meditate they want to get

themselves to read more each day and they want to get themselves to X right

or they want to stop some behavior they want to stop smoking they want to stop

eating this food they want to stop I always tell people stop checking your

phone in the first hour of the day I love and I and I just that's like sacred

time for me you know because I for me that's for I think that if you want to

be an elite mental performer or you know real-life superhero you don't want to

start off by checking the phone we talked about this in the past because

you're training yourself to be reactive right you're getting your dopamine

you're frying your nervous system with all these likes shares comments and

everything else like that that you've said if I'm not mistaken you sell your

sovereignty weed if you start by checking your phone I love that so much

because you're reacting and firefighting to everyone's like well I've been

thinking everyone wants so you're not really setting you're not living you

know that it's you've heard this many times right if you want to you in the

first hour of the day to win the rest you know they will even with room in the

day right and so anything you want to stop so I say you must stop checking

your phone right in the morning then there's certain like that's a behavior

right but there's so many other elements to be able to change because some most

behaviors don't stick right and so like what I'm thinking about when I want to

transform or transcend or make a real positive change I'm looking all the

other areas of ourself so I'm looking at for example our environment our people

setting up their environment to win and no social change doesn't just happen at

this level of behavior but what you have to change the environment so for example

if you want to stop eating a certain food it helps to be able to have not

that not have that food in your home right so you change the environment if

you want to read more it helps to help set up your environment where you have

the books readily available where you're gonna read it cuz they perform you know

how I how I approached habit change is this area of motivation and this trigger

right you want to trigger it to help remind you to do the behavior right so

are you setting up the environment in a way that triggers the behavior that you

want that's why you know people like Mark Zuckerberg or Tony Hsieh

we're the same t-shirts and and sweatshirts all the time because they

don't want to spend you know use up one of their decisions thinking all what am

I gonna wear today I don't want someone's watching this

they have a thing that something they want to change and it's not it's not

sticking then maybe it's not the environment maybe you check about your

habits but maybe it's your beliefs and your values some people will not get

themselves to read every day because they don't value reading every single

day right some people won't say the behavior they want change is you know we

did a podcast on how to remember names I could teach them step by step on how to

remember the name of the most people that they meet yet they won't do it

because they don't value it or because that's not important to them or they

don't believe that they can write just like we talked about earlier saying your

brain is like a supercomputer and you know your self-talk as a programmer run

so you tell yourself not go to runner names you will not be named there's

person to me because you program you're super duper you're not - they don't have

a belief that enables that when I say all behaviors believe driven if you want

to do this behavior whatever it is journal whatever it is and you need a

belief that allows that to happen because that's the program that allows

so how do you get that belief because you're gonna feel like you're faking it

right that's where most people stop right they they think okay I get it I

hear what you were saying that if I am able to shift my belief then I can get a

different behavior but I don't believe it

so now I'm just sort of faking it how do you help people overcome it right and so

you mean so some people approach it by thinking on its quote where they fake it

til they make it right um so my thing with belief is like when I do trainings

and groups or online my favourite way of changing the belief is getting them to

do something they never thought they could do because it opens up another

possibility right so so for example in 1954 Roger Bannister he broke the

four-minute mile right and so which is amazing right throughout human history

nobody can run a mile less than four minutes now if you if you look into it

how he was able to do it is he would visualize himself crossing the finish

line looking at the clock and it says 359 because he knew that success is an

inside-out process that first it had to happen in here in order for apt and out

there right um dr. Wayne Dyer has the famous phrase where it's not oh I'll

believe it when I see it's like I'll see it when I believe it

because it's the opposite right and so I've always liked modeling the outliers

where most people kind of just like kind of dismiss them I was like well what's

what's going on there that loves this person to get this kind of results right

and so with Roger Bannister he saw it in here be able to produce it outside just

like any innovator or and mentor right or any creator right but what was

interesting is after that would happen nobody could do it from the beginning of

humanity all of a sudden one person does it what happens after that everybody

yeah everyone starts doing it and so that's the thing now what happened was

there big change that year and you know training methodology and nutrition or

know who's a change of belief right because the belief back then was if you

ran a mile list the four minutes not only would you die it was your heart

would explode in your chest and like think about like that would and I'm a

runner right that would keep me not just running that would keep me for money

performance that would keep me from running period right right and so my

thing is like that was a change of a reference I woke up a belief so my goal

with people and when it comes to learning is get themselves to do

something they never thought they could do and then it opens up another

possibility it literally opens up their their nervous system for something what

else could be possible now I would also say that it all plays together where

it's not easy to say just a change a belief overnight and now that could be a

belief it's like a meta belief about what beliefs are but people there's

there's technologies like Inception right like a dream of a dream your dream

but I do believe that we have more we have more power to influence our

thoughts and our beliefs so my goal is to streamline my

I put the routines the first hour day and the last hour today I really

micromanage it's at a point where it's vitual I don't even have to think about

it and then because those are the times of day where I can really have the most

impact because later on it all day you know team members need this there's

firefighting that this client needs that but the first hour the last hour I

really want to control so all this really helped develop grit and

resilience you know in my body so I could have the ability to persevere you

know so I stand guard to my brain all the time what goes in and I don't watch

like a lot of the negative news and all the marketing I really focus like you

know I watch and I listen to your show and maybe a handful of little of things

I read each day because I need to keep it positive

I want hope and I'm looking for help I'm looking for inspiration and also

instruction alright listen and listen well because no truer words are ever

gonna be fucking spoken you can do anything you want without limitation

whatever it is that you decide you want to make come true in your life you can

do that it is gonna take an inhuman amount of work you're gonna have to be

prepared to break yourself in half you are going to have to learn more than

anyone has ever learned you're gonna have to push yourself harder than anyone

has ever asked you to push yourself before you're gonna go way beyond your

breaking point you're gonna run until you vomit you're gonna study until you

fall asleep you're going to push and push and push and then you're gonna push

some fucking more and when you hit the limit you're gonna push again beyond

that you're gonna force yourself to an adaptation response and why because it's

Malcolm X said the future belongs to those who prepare for it today so if you

don't put the work in today if you don't do the unending back-breaking work of

developing yourself into something greater the world is gonna pass you by

the people that are going to own it are going to be the ones that did

that work and the one promise that I can make you right now is that somebody

somebody out there is out working in somebody right now is doing the things

that I'm saying somebody right now is doing the work of failing and getting up

and getting better and pushing themselves and triggering that glorious

adaptation response that makes humans the apex predator someone right now

they're putting in that work and if you don't the future is gonna belong to them

and as Martin Luther King jr. said you can't fly then one if you can't run then

walk if you can't walk then crawl but whatever you do you have to keep moving

forward it's not okay to make excuses it's not gonna slow people down it's not

okay to ask the world to stop so that you can step out front it's not okay to

expect little of yourself and demand great rewards the only thing that's okay

is to be in line with the way that the world really works and if you want to be

great you've got to become capable of greatness you've got to develop your

skill set you've got to take what you have now

and if that's crawling than fucking crawl but you drag yourself ever forward

to a vision of yourself that is so clear and so specific that nothing could knock

you off your path because you my friends know exactly where you're going you're

willing to pay whatever price it takes to get there and no matter what anybody

says no matter how many fucking hecklers come for you no matter how many people

try to flow dirt on you try to stop you try to knock you down no matter how many

fucking people come for you at night while you sleep you will rise and you

will keep pushing forward and you would get better every day and no matter how

many times people chop at you knocking down knock you up the path we will get

back on you will crawl so you can walk you will walk till you run and then you

will run until you fly and that to my friends is the only path forward so if

you want a fucking future that makes you happy if you want a world that you're

excited about get your ass out there and earn it

For more infomation >> The Power of Habit One of the most Motivational Talks Ever - Duration: 10:14.

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Juguetes peligrosos - Duration: 2:30.

For more infomation >> Juguetes peligrosos - Duration: 2:30.

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Verge3D Puzzles Visual Logic - Duration: 21:45.

Let's take a look at the Verge3D Puzzles visual logic system. So this is

the early version 1.0 of Verge3Dd but I think if we get the basic concept of how

things in your Blender scene interact with the Puzzles logic system, it will be

easy to keep up with future changes. So this is the scene I'm going to work with.

I've just put together a few things to work as an example. What I have here is a

text object and then I've got a scanned model that I've imported as an OBJ file.

And it came with its texture and material and then I've got a few cubes

here to use as buttons and they are parented to my pump object there and

I've got an animation to work with here so you can see my cubes move along with

my pump scanned mode,l and then I've got a library object and this isn't entirely

necessary but it's a good idea to take all of the materials that you have in

your scene and attach them to a library object, that way you can make sure

they're all exported properly. If you want to utilize some materials that you

don't have attached to an object at the beginning, they won't be exported so this

is sort of an optional thing you can do to make sure you have all your materials

exported and all I've done there is just taken a a plain, subdivided it, and

then assigned a material to each each of my faces there. So the first thing we're

going to do is we're going to open the App Manager to create an application, so

since this is a visual logic app I'm going to go ahead and just name my

app "Logic" and what I'm going to do is before I hit the Create App button, I'm

gonna give you a split screen view so you can see what happens in your apps

folder, let's go to Verge3D/applications so here's a list of

applications, this is my main Verge3D file structure so if I go to

applications and if I hit create app. Now we have a new folder in our applications

directory and here are the files for our new application, so let's return to the

main screen and now we have our app listed here so let's open that up and go

to Puzzles. Now currently we have the default starter scene, so what I'm going

to do is take the Blender file that I've already got going here. I'm gonna save it

over the top of the default one that was created, so I'm gonna hit File Save As,

and here is the the one that was created and so I'm going to save over the top of

that, so the next thing we need to do is do a glTF Verge3D export. So if we go

to File, Export, come down here we're gonna do the Verge3D glTF. And let's make

sure it's going to go to the... since I've saved it from a different location, just

double check and make sure it's saving the glTF file in your applications

directory. We'll hit Export, so here's our scene

again so I'm gonna go ahead and and go back to our Applications Manager and

I'll go ahead and hit Puzzles again and there is our our scene. Now the first

operation we're going to do is we're gonna hide, and then for a selector we

have our object selectors, our animation selectors and material

selector, so we're just going to pull out an object selector and in the drop down

we're going to select our materials library, so now when our application runs

it's going to hide our materials library. So let's try running it. There it's done

so now every time the app loads the first thing that happens is the material

library gets hidden, now in order to save our changes we need to hit the Save

button, but here again I'm going to pull up a split screen view so you can see

what happens when you do that. Right now if you refresh

the page, you would lose everything you have done here, and so let's show you how

the save actually works, it's not important but if you're a coder it kind

of helps to understand what's going on behind the scenes, so in our Logic

application we have a JavaScript file called Visual_Logic.js and you can see

there's nothing here, so you don't need to worry about this but this is just a

matter of helping understand what happens when you do visual logic here, so

I'm gonna go ahead and hit save, now once I have this open with Sublime Text once

I click on this, then the code that I saved magically appears, so everything

that you do here, once saved, will update this visual Visual_Logic.js file. And one

little gem that might help you, you might not find this your first time, is down on

the corner here there's a little drag spot where you can drag it out and

change what you need to do. Sometimes it's helpful to see your whole scene and

other times when you're working on your logic nodes, you don't really need to see

much, you can just drag it out and fill it up like that. So the next thing I'm

going to do is make make it so when I click on this it plays the animation, so

let's go to events and bring out a when- clicked and we need an object selector

so if we go to the object selectors and we can pull out an object selector and

you can also, if there's already one in the scene, if you have it selected you

can hit ctrl C to copy and then ctrl V to paste and you'll have another copy.

And then you can always use the drop down to select your object, so I'll stick

that in there, and I'm going to bring up my pump model what did I call that thing?

Pump, there we go, so when clicked, and then I want to play

animation, so we need to... there we go play animation we'll pull that out. Now we

need another selector we'll go to the selectors and pull out the animation

selectors, and so you can see I have only one animation in this scene, so I'm gonna

delete that one right now. So now if we click our object it should

play... but I'm gonna save and then hit play to restart our app, and now when we

click our pump it plays the animation. Now I have these different buttons here

and what I want to do is be able to change the color of our model according

to which color we click. So when you select the top level of of your logic

blocks you can it moves them all around, but you can also copy them just like that.

I'm gonna start with a red cube and

I'm gonna say when clicked, now where's my red cube? There it is, and then it's gonna

play the animation, but I also want to assign a material, and we need to get out a

selector of a material there's a material selector, so there's our red

material. I want to assign red to... and I'm going to copy that one because we're

gonna assign it to the pump... oh, when it has "of" pump that's actually

the animation of pump so let's delete that and copy this one.

There we go, And let's play animation and assign material, red, to the

pump. And I'll hit Save and Play, and see what happens. There we go, so now it's

assigned that material to the pump. Now, I would like to be able to get my original

material back, so when we click the pump I would like to have it revert to its

original material, so I'm gonna copy this and put it up here and we're gonna

assign the pump material which I named so that I could figure out what it was

here, there we go Now I will save and play, and so now if I click my pump, it goes

back to its original material. The more groups you have in place the more you

can copy and paste, so I'm going to hit ctrl C and I'm going to copy it three

more times. So when clicked I'll change that to the blue cube. I want to play the

animation and assign the color blue and then the green cube assigns the color

green and the yellow cube whoops, yellow cube assigns yellow. There we go.

Let's save and play. There's red, blue, green, yellow and back to the original.

Okay, let's do a little bit of dynamic text logic with our text object

here. The first thing I'm going to do is create a variable for entering some text

so let's just go to our variables and create new variable and I'm just gonna

call it input. I'm gonna drag a set input to, onto the screen and then I'm going

to... Let's see I need a text input. Where do I find that? Prompt for text there we go.

This is going to... wait actually I need a select... there, there's my variable, so in

the little drop down for your variables you can select all the variables

that you have in your project. So it's gonna prompt for text and it's gonna

give you a message, it'll make a little window here that gives you a

message, so I'm just gonna put "enter text" so I'm gonna go to text and just get a

little text box here, and I'm gonna change that to "enter text" and so that

will prompt and so I want to make this an on-click function so let's drag in

and on click, so when my text objects, I'll just copy that in the drop down,

find my text. So when text is clicked it's going to set my input variable to

whatever's written in the prompt for text, so then we're gonna pull out an

update text operation, so we'll stick that in, and the object... there's the text

object we're going to update text with, we need a variable, our input variable, so

let's go up to variables and pull out that with whatever we input. All right,

let's try that. All right, so I'm going to click my text object, and I get a prompt.

I'm going to write "hi", enter and it changes to "hi".

So now let's add some if-then logic so let's go to our logic panel and I'm

gonna pull out an if statement. So I want to be able to dynamically change the

color according to the text that we input. So let's add some if-else

functions here. Let's build this up to have a total of four options, and on

these little gear icons, the only way to make it disappear is to click it again.

So, if we want if input.. oh we need it we need to do it like a logic operator this you know

we need this deal right here, so let's copy our variable, and then we

need just a text entry here so let's copy that

so if our text input is red, we want to do... update text objects... assign material

and then we want to assign... let's grab a

material already there, and we want to assign red, so if our input is typed in as

red we want to assign red to our object. There we go so let's add a couple

more of those in. What I'm doing is I just copied it and I'm just pasting

copies in. And so, what are our colors here in order here? So we've got red, blue,

green, yellow. So let's change that to blue, and we'll change that one to green,

and that one to yellow, and then we need our assign material copied, ctrl C to copy,

to control V to paste, paste that in, paste it in and paste it in here, so assign red...

so if it's red a assign red, if it's blue, assign blue, if it's green,

assign green, and if it's yellow, assign yellow. And we want to place this into

our little function here like this. There we go. So, when clicked, when the text

object is clicked, it's going to set our variable to an entered value.

It's gonna prompt for a text input and whatever we input is going to set it to

that value, then it's going to update a text object to whatever we

typed in. Now if that text entry happens to be red, it's gonna turn our text red.

If it's blue, it's gonna turn us blue, etc. So let's hit save and play.

To see if it works. I'm actually going to refresh to start from the beginning.

We'll hit refresh, by the way, make sure you hit save before you refresh your page. You

will lose it all! But then if you're accustomed to working with Blender,

you've learned by now to be careful where you click. So let's click on our

text object, we're prompted for text, I'm gonna type in "red", enter, and it updates

the text to our red string as well as changing our color, so let's click it

again. Let's try green. There's green. Let's

click it again, let's try blue, and there's blue. And if we enter something

arbitrary... whoops, then it doesn't change the color it updates the text, but it

doesn't do anything to the color unless the value that we enter matches one of our

input cases. So now that you've got an idea how the logic editor works, I'm

gonna invite you to look at some of the other examples that come with the SDK.

Let's go ahead and hit the back button, that's gonna

take us to our App Manager. Now I've got a couple here that you won't have, Iv'e got a

couple of my own applications I've already got started. A place to start is, go

to the E-learning application because that has a lot of great logic in it, so

let's open the puzzles for that, and I'm just gonna drag this out to give us some

more room to look at what they've got going on here. So what this is, this

is a Create List block. This basically creates an array and in that variable

you have all of these entered in. I'll give you a quick look at what the JavaScript looks like and so here's that actual array right here it's just it's

just a simple array with with all those entries, so you don't need to know about

that but if you do much coding it it kind of helps you know what's going on.

And that way this can be used in other places in the logic to to refer to all

of these objects here, so for example we have

"all parts animas" or all parts anims we're gonna so we're going to stop all

parts anims, so if you come up here we see that that name refers to all these

pieces, so let's take a look at some of the others if we go to the Ring, you can

see there's a lot of, you know, materials changes and stuff like that here and the

spinner, this has got an animation it starts and stops with.

I think after you play around with this for a little while you'll realize the

power that this visual logic system has. Just to make sure I cover everything

that's on here you have a zoom in and zoom out function, and if you somehow get

lost this centers your code, you've got that little drag corner there to drag it

out, you can hide your code to look at your app, and then bring it back out

again, if you hit delete you lose all your code but unless you hit save it's

not really gone, you can refresh and it all comes back. If you do a lot of coding

and forget to save, and hit refresh you'll lose everything that you haven't

saved, so kind of as a habit, every time I make any changes at all, I just go ahead

and hit save. And then the play button restarts your app and that works a lot

but sometimes if you want to start back from the beginning with some parameters

that that just come from your Blender scene or something you can just hit

refresh, and that works. So this is the blend file that I started with .

Ccheck the links in the description and I'll make this available

for download if you want to play with it. One other thing I wanted to cover is, if

you go to your application file here's my Logic file, if I was gonna upload this

to my website, I would upload all of these files with the exception of the

blend file, you don't need that, so once you upload these, your HTML file

will be the landing point and it will then refer to these other files.

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